Weirdly or not:
the conventions of a given genre may dictate a type of sound that, to the uninitiate, might be rather (or extremely) unpleasant.
"The conventions" by definition imply derivation. My brain wasn't on from the first 1965, 67-ish Clapton/Beck/Hendrix explosion, but it arose to catch the tailwinds of individual tone: Three notes, and you could quite easily pick out Garcia, Allman, Santana, Hendrix, the early twanks & reamers of Clapton-in-Stratland etc. And the first records that really gave me the Bad Dark Willies, the intimation that maybe things
weren't going to just keep getting better indefinitely? That would be the first Boston record - dick in a box! Tone-in-a-box, dick'n yer EAR? Kodak engineer Tom Scholtz had the "formula" for great(ish) tone - at which point, it's far more "-ish" than "great." :sad1: And the first-edition Jefferson Starship, where Craig Chaquico had some great tones - but they were other people's great tones!
By 1977-78, it was really spooky - OREO Speedcookie, Bachman-Turner Overweight, Styx, Journey, Foreigner, and soon enough, amps were coming supplied with the "great tones" as though they were Crayola wax crayons for your ear. Knopfler, "Discipline"-era King Crimson & Andy Summers managed to land some of the last great clean-ish original sounds that weren't just weird for weird sake's; undt
good dirt = Van Halen. I'm not sure the overdrive wars of Dimebag, Zakk & the Shrapnel/Shreddy clan/family/cult really counted as chasing "my own" sound, as much as chasing "the" sound? Yes, one COULD plug three Big Muffs into each other and obtain something "never before heard..." And there was a good REASON for that! :toothy12:
At a rather identifiable era, making OTHER PEOPLE'S SOUNDS became the ideal for electric guitars, whereas the earlier guys hearken back to the jazz concept of your OWN tone - and yes, both early Miles Davis and John Coltrane caught a lot of flak for playing jazz horns withOUT a Big Fat Happy vibrato! OF COURSE there are many great tones and they are all subject to figure/ground interaction with the rest of the music - but I don't think it coincidental that in the same "best-form-of-flattery" somatic-apocalypso the notion arose that the tone should be matched to the song, rather than "Holy Crap! Listen to what song the guitar tone MADE me play!" I shudder to stink what "Exile on Main Street" would sound like were the exact same songs recorded - using "good" tones!
Even SRV I would describe as basically refining the "Little Wing" Hendrix tone, though Stevie was able to find it repeatedly, whereas young Jimi was all OVER the place - and in fact I preferred his great clean(-ish) tones of the "Cry of Love" album, "Watchtower", "Wind Cries Mary" to his youthful howls of "Phoxy Pfurple" - as did he!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTWrmkqTOfk
(sorry about the Mp3, your ears deserve better - for that matter, some kids can't even HEAR Mp3-ishness, and they think "acoustic" guitars are SUPPOSED to sound like Takamines & Ovations! Don't get me started....)
P.S. - NONE of this is my personal opinion, it's TRUTH! Send money or I feed the baby. :hello2:
To the alligators.... :cool01:
P.S.S. - I think you got me started. Send alligators. :icon_tongue: